Wednesday 30th January 2013
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Edinburgh Travelling Fire Tests: Day 7 Video Blog
Tuesday 29th January 2013
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Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Edinburgh Travelling Fire Tests: Day 6 Video Blog
Monday 28th January 2013
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Sunday, January 27, 2013
Edinburgh Travelling Fire Tests: Day 5 Video Blog
Friday 25th January 2013
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Saturday, January 26, 2013
Edinburgh Travelling Fire Tests: Day 4 Video Blog
Thursday 24th January 2013
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Thursday, January 24, 2013
Edinburgh Travelling Fire Tests: Day 3 Video Blog
Wednesday 23rd January 2013
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Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Edinburgh Travelling Fire Tests: Day 2 Video Blog
Tuesday 22nd January 2013
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Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Edinburgh Travelling Fire Tests: Day 1 Video Blog
Monday 21st January 2013
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Friday, January 18, 2013
A Unique Opportunity to Lead a World-Class Research Centre
Applications for the BRE Chair in Fire Safety Engineering at Edinburgh
Vacancy Details
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Monday, January 07, 2013
Interested in pursuing a PhD in Fire Safety Engineering?
A number of full PhD studentships for UK, EU, or International students
are being made available through the School of Engineering at
Edinburgh. If you are an academically outstanding student who is
interested in applying for one of these in the area of Structural or
Fire Safety Engineering, please contact Dr Luke Bisby
. Additional information is available here:
http://www.ed.ac.uk/ schools-departments/ student-funding/postgraduate/ uk-eu/university-scholarships/ development
And here:
http://www.ed.ac.uk/ schools-departments/ student-funding/postgraduate/ international/global/research
Please share.
http://www.ed.ac.uk/
And here:
http://www.ed.ac.uk/
Please share.
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
The Social Aspects of Fire
IT-SAFE Announcement
We are pleased to announce that Dr Graham
Spinardi has been appointed as Senior Research Fellow on the Integrating
Technical and Social Aspects of Fire Safety Engineering and Expertise (IT-SAFE)
project. This is a prestigious interdisciplinary project designed to improve
fire safety and the quality of the built environment through better integration
of social and engineering research, supported by the University of Edinburgh,
The Ove Arup Foundation, and the Royal Academy of Engineering (see https://www.stis.ed.ac.uk/research_projects/it-safe).
Dr Spinardi has a long record at the
University of Edinburgh researching the social shaping of technologies, with
particular emphasis on historical studies of military innovation and other
state-funded research. Major research grants include: a comparative study of
innovation by firms in the UK, Germany, Japan and the USA, based on inventions
patented and licensed by the British Technology Group and its predecessor, the
National Research Development Corporation; a study of key developments in UK
radar technology and their relationship to both strategic requirements, and to
their exploitation for dual-use applications; a history of US Ballistic Missile
Defence technology, focusing on the way that technical knowledge is
constructed, particularly as regards claims about performance, and how test
performance is extrapolated to operational conditions; and, a study of how the
conservative nature of airliner development has limited the uptake of
potentially greener alternative technologies.
Tuesday, October 02, 2012
Regulation as Inspiration?
To what extent do prescriptive fire safety regulations influence the aesthetic and functional characteristics of the spaces in which we live and work?
What happens when fire safety regulation becomes the INSPIRATION for a design, rather than a DETRACTOR from the desired aesthetic?
Check out this fascinating look at the outcomes of a recent collaborative effort by our colleague Liam Ross in the Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (ESALA), entitled "Invitation & Escape: The Architecture of Fire Safety Regulation," in which prescriptive fire safety requirements are turned on their heads and used as inspiration in an architectural design studio.
If you are an engineer... this will almost certainly push you outside your comfort zone.
I recommend it.
The Invitation & Escape project can be viewed here:
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B2I0XCL77YSMQk11NDBBS3JlaXM/edit?pli=1
Liam Ross' other research can be viewed here:
https://sites.ace.ed.ac.uk/liamross/research/
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Fancy being the Head of School of Engineering at The University of Edinburgh?
A Fire Safety Engineer as Head of an Engineering School?
The University is now seeking to
appoint a new Head of School. Candidates for this position will be expected to
demonstrate leadership and management of the highest calibre, an international
research reputation and a commitment to maximising the quality and effectiveness
of teaching. All research areas will be considered, including Fire Safety Engineering. Candidates will be able to demonstrate excellent ambassadorial and
interpersonal qualities and a record of developing and strengthening
relationships with industry and peer institutions, as well as leading a large
team of academic and professional support staff. Additional information below.
Appointment of the Head of the
School of Engineering
The University of Edinburgh School of Engineering supports world-class excellence in research and teaching. The School was ranked third (in General Engineering) in the UK (Research Fortnight RAE 2008 Analysis Power Rankings) in the last UK Research Assessment Exercise (2008) and has a strong track record in producing technology spin outs and developing industry links that enable our graduates to build relationships that last a whole career. The College of Science & Engineering, of which the School forms a part, is one of the largest science and engineering groupings in the UK.
Recent investment includes a £6.5
million Industrial Doctorate Centre in Offshore Renewable Energy, led by the
University of Edinburgh that will train 50 engineering doctorate students over
nine years in all aspects of Offshore Renewable Energy. The University's
leadership in low-carbon energy has been further enhanced through £9 million
investment on the UK All-Waters Combined Current and Wave test facility for wave
and tidal devices. The £12.5m UK CCS Research Centre (UKCCSRC,
www.ukccsrc.ac.uk ) is a virtual
hub that brings together leading UK carbon capture and storage (CCS) researchers
and acts as a two-way interface between the academic community and key
stakeholders (e.g. government, industry and potential international
collaborators). The School is also a founder member of the Engineering Research
Partnership in engineering and mathematics (ERPem), a consortium involving the
University of Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt University and Edinburgh Napier University,
set up in 2006 with SFC/OST investment. The ERPem is organised into six Joint
Research Institutes (JRIs) dedicated to world-class research, innovation and
education in engineering and mathematical science.
The University of Edinburgh aims to
ensure equality of opportunity and holds an Athena SWAN bronze award.
For further information including
details and information on how to apply, go on-line at
www.jobs.ed.ac.uk
New Lectureship in Fire Dynamics!
We're very pleased to let you know that to continue its policy of investment in ouststanding research and teaching in the area of Fire Safety, the BRE Centre for Fire Safety Engineering is seeking to appoint a high calibre individual in the area of FIRE DYNAMICS or COMBUSTION at either Lecturer (Grade UE08) or Senior Lecturer (Grade UE09). This appointment is a full time continuing post (subject to satisfactory review after a 3 year probationary period). This Lectureship is one of up to 10 positions currently being advertized across the School of Engineering at Edinburgh, and this dedicated position in the area of Fire Dynamics or Combustion is directed specifically to support the activities of the world-class BRE Centre for Fire Safety Engineering. Full details of the position are given at the following link: http://www.jobs.ed.ac.uk/vacancies/index.cfm?fuseaction=vacancies.furtherdetails&vacancy_ref=3016267 The BRE Centre for Fire Safety Engineering (BRE CFSE) at the University of Edinburgh (UoE) is among the most successful and productive research centres within the School of Engineering at Edinburgh. The BRE CFSE currently encompasses 7 academic staff and more than 30 PhD students and post-doctoral researchers. We develop a wide array of projects in the area of Fire Safety that range from structural performance to fire dynamics to material flammability. The Centre has created many vehicles for the dissemination of research as well as numerous links with industry. The Centre includes a state of the art small scale fire research facility, in-house capability for non-standard structural fire testing, access to BRE’s large scale fire testing facilities, the only UK based Structural Fire Engineering degrees, and a joint international masters degree with world-leading partners at the Universities of Lund and Ghent. Informal enquiries regarding the advertized post can be made to Dr Luke Bisby, via email: luke.bisby@ed.ac.uk.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Professor / Assistant Prof job in Fire Safety Engineering in Finland
Aalto
University, Finland, announces the professorship in Fire Safety
Engineering in the Department of Civil and Structural Engineering. The
announcement
can be found in:
The application deadline is November 16, 2012.
The
post is open from Assistant to Full Professor level, covering the area
from young Research Scientists to more experienced Research fellows and
Professors.
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Monday, September 17, 2012
Through an Architect's Eyes
Fire engineers often work closely with architects to try
and incorporate fire safety systems & processes into the design process
from an early stage. Ultimately it is the designers, not the fire engineers,
who will change and improve the building’s design. It seems strange therefore that
there would not be a single fire safety engineer working in an architecture
practice, anywhere in the world. The role just did not exist.
Well, not until this year.
For the past 8 months one member of the BRE Centre for Fire Safety Engineering at the University of Edinburgh worked at Foster +Partners to help designers
create fundamentally fire safe buildings. This unique experience was one of
several progressive ideas conceived at the 2011 LRET Conference in Edinburgh and is the latest collaborative initiative between Foster +
Partners and the BRE Centre for Fire Safety Engineering.
It was initially thought that the Fire Engineer employed in
this role would solve fire safety problems for the design team (including
architects and engineers). After
all that’s what engineers do: solve problems. In fact the individual working at
F+P would solve very few fire problems and would do very little ‘engineering’.
The ‘In-House Fire Safety Engineer’ would become known as the ‘Fire Safety
Advisor’ or more simply, the ‘Fire Guy’.
The reason for the change was simple. If specific fire
safety problems were outsourced to a fire engineer – even an in-house one – the
lack of integration would mean architects would have to compromise on other
parts of the design for the fire strategy to work.
The Fire Guy needed to have three roles, not one, of which
engineering was the third and last. The three roles would be:
1) To identify and define problems using fundamental
assumptions only i.e. assumptions that remain valid irrespective of the context
in which they are applied. Re-defining and explaining why each problem was
indeed a problem improved designers’ understanding of the criteria they should
aim to achieve, and significantly expanded the range of choices available to
them.
F+P designers and engineers previously defined problems purely
in terms of code compliance – which was logical in the absence of specialist
fire safety knowledge. If a design did not comply with the codes, it was a fire
safety problem. However, due to the irregular nature of the structures being designed,
the assumptions on which the codes were based were not always valid; a
prescriptive solution intended for a 3m-high ceiling would not deliver the same
performance if applied to a ceiling 17m high and angled at 70°. Therefore a
problem defined purely on the basis of code-compliance was not necessarily a fire safety problem.
2) The second role, once the architects had gained a clear
understanding of the fire safety aims, was to give designers the opportunity to
achieve the aims autonomously. Architects have to consider every variable
associated with the design of a building, including aesthetics, functionality,
cost, environmental sustainability, structural integrity, M&E
serviceability and code compliance among a plethora of other variables, all of
which must be integrated if the building’s design is to be optimised. Once the
architects knew what they were trying to achieve, they were able to create some
extraordinarily innovative solutions to solve fire safety problems, all of
which were optimised for their unique building.
Architects lacked confidence in their own ability to create
fire safe solutions and would yield to the recommendations of fire safety
‘experts’ often despite knowing that their own solutions made sense
conceptually. The fire safety advisor was able to assess and criticise
solutions put forward by both the architects and fire experts to establish
which one would be the most effective. In many cases it was the solution put
forward by the architects but in either case the discussion led to increased
understanding of the issues involved and greater confidence in the chosen
solution.
3) The third and final role of a fire safety advisor was to
create a fire-safe solution and ‘prove’ its effectiveness. In reality this rarely happened.
Reviewing drawings and producing fire safe designs was easy; doing it in a way
that would create a fully optimised building design was not. A fire safety
engineer has just one variable to work with, and has the luxury to choose from literally thousands of possible solutions. The architect meanwhile
must iterate the building’s design and compromise between variables,
eventually reaching a fully optimised solution. The in-house fire safety advisor was only
asked to create solutions if/when the architects were unable to produce
viable solutions of their own. This happened just once during the entire
8-month period at Foster + Partners.
The experience demonstrated the potential for a new role in fire safety; one where a fire safety advisor works directly for an architecture practice to help incorporate fire safety systems & processes into the building’s design. In hindsight it is rather unsurprising that it has taken this long to create such a role. It requires specialist education that, at the moment, cannot be obtained anywhere in the world.
Perhaps someday someone will create such an education
system…
Thursday, September 13, 2012
BRE Centre PhD grads continue to excel...
A nice little story on one of our nicest (and brightest) graduates...
Click for PDF
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Monday, September 03, 2012
Be an International Master of Fire Safety Engineering - Apply now for 2013
The International Masters in Fire Safety Engineering (IMFSE) programme, a two year postgraduate degree offered jointly by the Universities of Edinburgh (UK), Lund (Sweden) and Ghent (Belgium), has been running for two years now and the first cohort of students recently graduated.
The IMFSE accepts new students every year.
Applications for
the following academic year open in September and close in January. Apply now for places in the 2013-15 class.
For
specific application deadlines, updated admission requirements and other
practical information, visit our website at www.imfse.ugent.be
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Tuesday, August 14, 2012
PhD Studentship possibility at University of Strathclyde
Applications are sought for a PhD studentship in improved analysis methods for brominated
fire retardants in the natural environment.
Brominated fire retardants (BFRs) are a broad class
of chemicals that are used in plastics, protective coatings, fabrics, furniture
foam and other materials to delay ignition and slow fire growth to improve the
fire safety of materials. Very little is known about BFRs at low exposure
concentrations, but widespread detection around the world underscores the need
to learn more about their toxicity effects, potential carcinogenicity and ease
of mobility in the environment. The aims of this interdisciplinary PhD
studentship are to develop analytical methods for improved detection of BFRs in
the environment and utilise advanced chemometric methods for evaluating the
data collected from these complex samples.
The detection of fire retarding compounds is
challenged by many factors. A study evaluating prescribed analysis methods for
highly purified standards showed that many BFRs have overlapping retention
times in standard analytical methods, which means that they are not separated
adequately when present in a mixture. This potential may increase as the
complexity of samples increases. In at least two cases, environmental samples thought
to contain PBDE-derived compounds were demonstrated to contain materials of
natural origin only. Despite these demonstrated inadequacies, standard methods
continue to be prescribed and BFR detections continue to be reported around the
world. Advances in two-dimensional gas chromatography, isotope ratio mass
spectrometry and position specific isotope analysis make development of new
analytical methods possible.
The successful candidate will join an
interdisciplinary research team spanning the Departments of Civil &
Environmental Engineering (Faculty of Engineering) and Pure & Applied
Chemistry (Faculty of Science). We are most interested a researcher with 1st
class or upper 2nd class Honours degree in engineering, chemistry, physics,
applied mathematicians or other discipline. A strong computational background
is preferred.
There is one studentship associated with this
advertisement and this student will be based at the University of Strathclyde.
The studentship is open to individuals within the EU/EEA only and provides a
stipend of approximately £13,800 per year. For further information or to apply
for this studentship, please contact Dr. Christine Switzer at
christine.switzer@strath.ac.uk.
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Tuesday, June 19, 2012
SiF Review and post-script apology
I understand that my recent Blog posting has caused some upset amongst the SiF community. If my comments have caused offence then I am sorry.
However, constructive criticism and open debate are at the centre of all learned organizations (the SiF Movement is no exception), and we must be able to hear criticism with ears as wide as we hear praise. My comments were intended only to help the SiF movement to maintain a reputation for scientific and engineering excellence. I welcome open debate on the issues I raised, and if my comments are incorrect or uninformed then I will happily withdraw them.
However, constructive criticism and open debate are at the centre of all learned organizations (the SiF Movement is no exception), and we must be able to hear criticism with ears as wide as we hear praise. My comments were intended only to help the SiF movement to maintain a reputation for scientific and engineering excellence. I welcome open debate on the issues I raised, and if my comments are incorrect or uninformed then I will happily withdraw them.
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